Openly Gay GOP Candidate Richard Tisei Loses House Bid

BOSTON - Scandal-plagued Democratic U.S. Rep. John Tierney fended off a fierce challenge from Republican Richard Tisei on Tuesday to win re-election.

With 100 percent of precincts reporting int he 6th District, Tierney won with 179,603 votes, or 48 percent, to 175,953 votes, or 47 percent, for Tisei. Libertarian candidate Daniel Fishman won 16,668 votes, or 4 percent.

Tierney, who's from Salem and first took office in 1996, struggled to contain the fallout from a federal criminal case involving his wife and her family. His wife agreed in October 2010 to plead guilty to federal charges she helped her brothers conceal an illegal offshore gambling operation. She was sentenced to 30 days behind bars.

Tierney said he didn't know the online gambling operation in Antigua was illegal.

Tisei, a former state senator from Lynnfield who would have been the first Republican to win a U.S. House race in Massachusetts since 1994, accused him of being dishonest with voters in the 6th District, which includes the state's northern coast.

The GOP poured money into the race to support Tisei, whose campaign said Tierney was insulting the intelligence of voters by claiming he was unaware of the illegal nature of the gambling operation.

Tierney first took office after defeating Republican Peter Torkildsen in 1996. Torkildsen and Peter Blute, who also was defeated that year, were the last Massachusetts Republicans to serve in the U.S. House.

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The race between openly gay Republican candidate Richard Tisei and Rep. John Tierney for the a seat in the House of Representatives for Massachusetts’s 6th Congressional District is on fire just one day before the elections.

Richard Tisei, an out-Republican running for Congress in Massachusetts, has come under fire by conservatives for being too liberal, especially regarding gay marriage, as well as by Democrats like retiring Mass. Rep. Barney Frank.